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Chapter 16

ECON 6002 Econometrics Memorial University of Newfoundland. Qualitative and Limited Dependent Variable Models. Chapter 16. Adapted from Vera Tabakova’s notes . Chapter 16: Qualitative and Limited Dependent Variable Models. 16.1 Models with Binary Dependent Variables

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Chapter 16

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  1. ECON 6002 Econometrics Memorial University of Newfoundland Qualitative and Limited Dependent Variable Models Chapter 16 Adapted from Vera Tabakova’s notes

  2. Chapter 16: Qualitative and Limited Dependent Variable Models • 16.1 Models with Binary Dependent Variables • 16.2 The Logit Model for Binary Choice • 16.3 Multinomial Logit • 16.4 Conditional Logit • 16.5 Ordered Choice Models • 16.6 Models for Count Data • 16.7 Limited Dependent Variables Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  3. 16.3 Multinomial Logit Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-3 Examples of multinomial choice (polytomous) situations: Choice of a laundry detergent: Tide, Cheer, Arm & Hammer, Wisk, etc. Choice of a major: economics, marketing, management, finance or accounting. Choices after graduating from high school: not going to college, going to a private 4-year college, a public 4 year-college, or a 2-year college.

  4. 16.3 Multinomial Logit Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-4 The explanatory variable xi is individual specific, but does not change across alternatives. Example age of the individual. The dependent variable is nominal

  5. 16.3 Multinomial Logit Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-5 Examples of multinomial choice situations: It is key that there are more than 2 choices It is key that there is no meaningful ordering to them. Otherwise we would want to use that information (with an ordered probit or ordered logit)

  6. 16.3 Multinomial Logit Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-6 In essence this model is like a set of simultaneous individual binomial logistic regressions With appropriate weighting, since the different comparisons between different pairs of categories would generally involve different numbers of observations

  7. 16.3.1 Multinomial Logit Choice Probabilities Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  8. 16.3.2 Maximum Likelihood Estimation Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  9. 16.3.3 Post-Estimation Analysis Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  10. 16.3.3 Post-Estimation Analysis An interesting feature of the odds ratio (16.21) is that the odds of choosing alternative j rather than alternative 1 does not depend on how many alternatives there are in total. There is the implicit assumption in logit models that the odds between any pair of alternatives is independent of irrelevant alternatives (IIA). Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  11. IIA assumption Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-11 There is the implicit assumption in logit models that the odds between any pair of alternatives is independent of irrelevant alternatives (IIA) One way to state the assumption If choice A is preferred to choice B out of the choice set {A,B}, then introducing a third alternative X, thus expanding that choice set to {A,B,X}, must not make B preferable to A. which kind of makes sense 

  12. IIA assumption Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-12 There is the implicit assumption in logit models that the odds between any pair of alternatives is independent of irrelevant alternatives (IIA) In the case of the multinomial logit model, the IIA implies that adding another alternative or changing the characteristics of a third alternative must not affect the relative odds between the two alternatives considered. This is not realistic for many real life applications involving similar (substitute) alternatives.

  13. IIA assumption Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-13 This is not realistic for many real life applications with similar (substitute) alternatives Examples: Beethoven/Debussy versus another of Beethoven’s Symphonies (Debreu 1960; Tversky 1972) Bicycle/Pony (Luce and Suppes 1965) Red Bus/Blue Bus (McFadden 1974). Black slacks, jeans, shorts versus blue slacks (Hoffman, 2004) Etc.

  14. IIA assumption Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-14 This is not realistic for many real life applications with similar (substitute) alternatives Examples: Beethoven/Debussy (Debreu 1960; Tversky 1972) Bicycle/Pony (Luce and Suppes 1965) Red Bus/Blue Bus (McFadden 1974). Black slacks, blue slacks, jeans, shorts (Hoffman, 2004) Etc.

  15. IIA assumption Red Bus/Blue Bus (McFadden 1974). Imagine commuters first face a decision between two modes of transportation: car and red bus Suppose that a consumer chooses between these two options with equal probability, 0.5, so that the odds ratio equals 1. Now add a third mode, blue bus. Assuming bus commuters do not care about the color of the bus (they are perfect substitutes), consumers are expected to choose between bus and car still with equal probability, so the probability of car is still 0.5, while the probabilities of each of the two bus types should go down to 0.25 However, this violates IIA: for the odds ratio between car and red bus to be preserved, the new probabilities must be: car 0.33; red bus 0.33; blue bus 0.33 Te IIA axiom does not mix well with perfect substitutes 

  16. IIA assumption We can test this assumption with a Hausman-McFadden test which compares a logistic model with all the choices with one with restricted choices (mlogtest, hausmanbase in STATA, but check option detail too: mlogtest, hausman detail) However, see Cheng and Long (2007) Another test is Small and Hsiao’s (1985) STATA’s command is mlogtest, smhsiao (careful: the sample is randomly split every time, so you must set the seed if you want to replicate your results) See Long and Freese’s book for details and worked examples

  17. IIA assumption use nels_small, clear average grade on 13 point scale with 1 = highest

  18. IIA assumption

  19. IIA assumption The randomness…

  20. IIA assumption Extensions have arisen to deal with this issue The multinomial probit and the mixed logit are alternative models for nominal outcomes that relax IIA, by allowing correlation among the errors (to reflect similarity among options) but these models often have issues and assumptions themselves  IIA can also be relaxed by specifying a hierarchical model, ranking the choice alternatives. The most popular of these is called the McFadden’s nested logit model, which allows correlation among some errors, but not all (e.g. Heiss 2002) Generalized extreme value and multinomial probit models possess another property, the Invariant Proportion of Substitution (Steenburgh 2008), which itself also suggests similarly counterintuitive real-life individual choice behavior The multinomial probit has serious computational disadvantages too, since it involves calculating multiple (one less than the number of categories) integrals. With integration by simulation this problem is being ameliorated now…

  21. 16.3.4 An Example Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  22. 16.3.4 An Example mlogit psechoice grades, baseoutcome(1)

  23. 16.3.4 An Example . tab psechoice, gen(coll) So we can run the individual logits by hand…here “3-year college” versus “no college”

  24. 16.3.4 An Example . tab psechoice, gen(coll) So we can run the individual logits by hand…here “4 year college” versus “no college” Coefficients should look familiar… But check sample sizes!

  25. 16.3.4 An Example Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-25

  26. 16.3.4 An Example Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  27. 16.3.4 An Example * compute predictions and summarize predict ProbNo ProbCC ProbColl summarize ProbNo ProbCC ProbColl This must always Happen, so do not Use sample values To assess predictive accuracy! Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-27

  28. 16.3.4 An Example Compute marginal effects, say for outcome 1 (no college) If not specified, calculation is done at means Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-28

  29. 16.3.4 An Example Compute marginal effects, say for outcome 1 (no college) If specified, calculation is done at chosen level

  30. Example Another annotated example http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/Stata/output/stata_mlogit_output.htm This example showcases also the use of the option rrr which yields the interpretation of the multinomial logistic regression in terms of relative risk ratios In general, the relative risk is a ratio of the probability of an event in the exposed group versus a non-exposed group. Used often in epidemiology

  31. Example In STATA mlogit Note that you should specify the base category or STATA will choose the most frequent one It is interesting to experiment with changing the base category Or use listcoef to get more results automatically

  32. Combining Categories Consider testing whether two categories could be combined If none of the independent variables really explain the odds of choosing choice A versus B, you should merge them In STATA mlogtest, combine (Wald test) Or mlogtest, lrcomb (LR test)

  33. Our example… mlogit psechoice grades faminc , baseoutcome(3) mlogit psechoice grades faminc , baseoutcome(3) Where does this come from?

  34. Our example… mlogit psechoice grades faminc , baseoutcome(3) We test whether all the Coefficients are null When comparing category 1 to the base, Which is 3 here

  35. Our example… mlogit psechoice grades faminc , baseoutcome(3) These tests are based on comparing unrestricted versus constrained Regressions, where only the intercept is nonzero for the relevant category

  36. Our example… These tests are based on comparing unrestricted versus constrained Regressions, where only the intercept is nonzero for the relevant category: mlogit psechoice grades faminc , baseoutcome(3) nolog est store unrestricted constraint define 27 [1] mlogit psechoice grades faminc , baseoutcome(3) constraint(27) nolog est store restricted lrtest restricted unrestricted Yields:

  37. Multinomial Logit versus Probit Computational issues make the Multinomial Probit very rare LIMDEP seemed to be one of the few software packages that used to include a canned routine for it STATA has now asmprobit Advantage: it does not need IIA 

  38. Logit as special case of Multinomial Logit

  39. Logit as special case of Multinomial Logit Why are the coefficient signs reversed?

  40. 16.4 Conditional Logit Example: choice between three types (J = 3) of soft drinks, say Pepsi, 7-Up and Coke Classic. Let yi1, yi2 and yi3 be dummy variables that indicate the choice made by individual i. The price facing individual i for brand j is PRICEij. Variables like price are to be individual and alternative specific, because they vary from individual to individual and are different for each choice the consumer might make Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  41. 16.4 Conditional Logit Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-41 Variables like price are to be individual and alternative specific, because they vary from individual to individual and are different for each choice the consumer might make Another example: of mode of transportation choice: time from home to work using train, car, or bus.

  42. 16.4.1 Conditional Logit Choice Probabilities Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  43. 16.4.1 Conditional Logit Choice Probabilities Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  44. 16.4.2 Post-Estimation Analysis • The own price effect is: • The cross price effect is: Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  45. 16.4.2 Post-Estimation Analysis The odds ratio depends on the difference in prices, but not on the prices themselves. As in the multinomial logit model this ratio does not depend on the total number of alternatives, and there is the implicit assumption of the independence of irrelevant alternatives (IIA). Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  46. 16.4.3 An Example Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition

  47. 16.4.3 An Example The predicted probability of a Pepsi purchase, given that the price of Pepsi is $1, the price of 7-Up is $1.25 and the price of Coke is $1.10 is:

  48. 16.4.3 An Example use http://www.stata-press.com/data/lf2/travel2.dta, clear Principles of Econometrics, 3rd Edition Slide16-48

  49. An example For this transportation example, the dependent variable is choice, a binary variable indicating which mode of transportation was chosen The regressors include the J − 1 dummy variables train and bus that identify each alternative mode of transportation and the alternative-specific variables time and invc (invc contains the in-vehicle cost of the trip: we expect that the higher the cost of traveling by some mode, the less likely a person is to choose that mode) Use the option group(id) to specify that the id variable identifies the groups in the sample

  50. An example Example from Greene and Hensher (1997) used by Long and Freese too illustrate clogit in STATA: Data on 152 groups (id) of travelers, choosing between three modes of travel: train, bus or car For each group, there are three rows of data corresponding to the three choices faced by each group, so we have N × J = 152 × 3 = 456 observations.

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